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Hundredweights (UK) to Long Tons (cwt to long tn) Converter

1 cwt = 0.05 long tn

1 Hundredweight (UK) equals 0.05 Long Tons (1 cwt = 0.05 long tn). Convert Hundredweights (UK) to Long Tons with formula, table, and examples.

One long hundredweight equals exactly 0.05 long tons, or one-twentieth of a long ton. This is one of the cleanest conversions in the Imperial system - exactly 20 long hundredweights make one long ton of 2,240 pounds. Both units belong to the same British Imperial weight hierarchy that governed centuries of commerce and shipping.

How to Convert Hundredweights (UK) to Long Tons

long tn = cwt ÷ 20
Divide the value in Hundredweights (UK) by 20
  1. Take your value in Hundredweights (UK)
  2. Divide by 20
  3. Read the result in Long Tons

Common Hundredweights (UK) to Long Tons Conversions

Hundredweights (UK) (cwt) Long Tons (long tn) Status
0.5 cwt 0.025 long tn
1 cwt 0.05 long tn
2 cwt 0.1 long tn
5 cwt 0.25 long tn
10 cwt 0.5 long tn
15 cwt 0.75 long tn
20 cwt 1 long tn
25 cwt 1.25 long tn
40 cwt 2 long tn
50 cwt 2.5 long tn
100 cwt 5 long tn
200 cwt 10 long tn
500 cwt 25 long tn

Good to Know About Hundredweights (UK) to Long Tons Conversion

The 20-hundredweight ton was the structural unit of British maritime commerce for over three centuries. When Samuel Pepys managed the Royal Navy in the 1660s, he accounted for provisions in tons and hundredweights. When the coal industry powered the Industrial Revolution, household deliveries were measured in hundredweight multiples of the ton. The ratio of 20:1 was so deeply ingrained in British commercial thinking that many older Britons still instinctively understand 'a ton' as 20 hundredweight rather than 1,000 kilograms.

Hundredweights (UK) to Long Tons: What You Need to Know

The relationship between hundredweights and long tons was the backbone of British bulk commodity trading. Coal was priced per ton, delivered in hundredweight sacks, and tallied as fractions of tons. Ship cargo manifests listed loads in tons and hundredweights. This exact 1:20 ratio made mental arithmetic easy for merchants and dockers working without calculators in the pre-metric era.

What is a Hundredweight (UK)? cwt

A UK hundredweight (long hundredweight) is exactly 112 pounds or 50.80234544 kilograms. Used in British agriculture and traditional commerce.

Imperial UK agriculture traditional British commerce
Learn more about Hundredweight (UK) →

What is a Long Ton? long tn

A long ton (imperial ton) is a unit of mass equal to exactly 2,240 pounds or 1,016.0469088 kilograms. It is used primarily in the United Kingdom for shipping and naval displacement.

Imperial UK shipping naval displacement Commonwealth trade
Learn more about Long Ton →

Going the other way? Use our Long Tons to Hundredweights (UK) converter.

Hundredweights (UK) to Long Tons FAQ

  • Exactly 20. One long ton is defined as 2,240 pounds, and one long hundredweight is 112 pounds. Dividing 2,240 by 112 gives exactly 20. This clean ratio was deliberately maintained for ease of commercial calculation.

  • Because the long ton was defined as 20 hundredweights. The system was built from the bottom up: 14 pounds made a stone, 8 stones made a hundredweight, and 20 hundredweights made a ton. Each ratio was chosen for practical divisibility in head-calculation at markets and docks.

  • It is among the simplest. The factor of 20 is a clean integer, unlike conversions to metric which produce decimals. Within the Imperial system, the hundredweight-to-ton conversion was designed to be easy, and it succeeded. Merchants could instantly convert between the two without any arithmetic errors.

Non-Frequently Asked Questions About Hundredweights (UK) to Long Tons

Questions nobody should ask - but someone did.

  • Because this conversion stays within the same system. Imperial-to-Imperial conversions are clean integers by design: 16 ounces per pound, 14 pounds per stone, 8 stones per hundredweight, 20 hundredweights per ton. The ugly numbers only appear when converting to metric, because the metric system uses a different base. Within its own world, the Imperial system is surprisingly elegant.

  • Yes, exactly that. Each hundredweight sack was counted as it went aboard, and every 20 sacks completed one ton. Tally clerks kept count on chalk boards or notched sticks. At busy ports like Liverpool and London, dozens of clerks would be counting hundredweights simultaneously across multiple ships. The job required arithmetic, stamina, and a very loud voice.

  • Exactly 5 percent. This is one of the few weight relationships where the percentage works out to a clean number. Carrying one hundredweight, you are bearing precisely one-twentieth of a ton on your shoulders - which sounds heroic until you remember that a full ton is over a thousand kilograms and you are holding about 50.8 of them.